Photos that will be available to purchase:

Framed photographs....

"Light is not so much something that reveals, as it is itself the revelation."

James Turrell

Transient light from a retreating storm bathes the wetlands of The Plains, beside the tidal River Dart, in Totnes - during the ‘golden hour’ of a summer evening.

Behind the meadows are the Church of St John the Evangelist and the tall old townhouses of Bridgetown. Dating from 1832, the church was built by the eleventh Duke of Somerset for the tenants of his estate and was a chapel of ease to Berry Pomeroy.

The tidal water meadow / marshland on which the cattle graze is a remnant of The Plains – much of which was drained to build houses.

Start Point is a promontory in the South Hams district in Devon, England, grid reference SX832370. Close to the most southerly point in the county, it marks the southern limit of Start Bay, which extends northwards to the estuary of the River Dart.

Deep in the Didworthy Bottom woodlands - way, way beyond the footpaths, the mighty waters of the River Avon find their way down falls and rapids on the approach to the narrows of a 'Grade 5+' section of the lower Avon Gorge.

No tracks lead to this point through the dense woodland - by foot or by kayak it summons and one finds a way to get there...

This section of the river lies downstream of Shipley Bridge.

The river is known locally as The Aune. It rises in the southern half of Dartmoor National Park in an area of bog to the west of Ryder’s Hill. After leaving the moor it passes through South Brent and then Avonwick towards Aveton Gifford and flows into the English Channel at Bigbury on Sea.

The name Avon comes from the Old Brythonic (proto-Celtic) term ‘abona’ which means river.